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Escort agency offers virgin for sale
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WHAT sort of man will pay $12,000 for an 18-year-old's virginity?
This is what Sweet Girls Premium Escort, which is offering a Chinese-born Melbourne high school student, hopes to find out.
Virginity for sale ... a picture of an escort from the website.
The Sydney escort agency says this "rare opportunity" starts from May 19.
"She is a virgin, you can tell," a spokeswoman told The Sun-Herald.
"She goes to your place or hotel and you can spend two days together. She does not have a boyfriend and she wants to do it for the money," she said.
The escort agency recruits mostly Asian women aged 18 to 25 and suggests to potential workers they can make easy cash.
The website written in English and Chinese suggests working for the agency "to solve your financial problem within short time".
It continues: "Want to earn tuition fee? Reduce your family financial burden? Want to buy luxury brand like Louis Vuitton, etc? Please contact us immediately!! We will tailor a work plan to help you resolve your financial problem within short time!!"
The agency's website has photos of the girl but her face is obscured.
Women's advocate Melinda Tankard Reist said the virginity sale and promotion of luxury goods as a cause to work for exposed the brothel's lack of ethics.
"If the woman is in financial need then the brothel is a vulture preying on her financial desperation.
"Are they putting the girl's interests first or profiting from her and don't care about what happens the night she loses her virginity?" she said.
"No woman should have to sell her body for education. Has anyone asked why she needs the money? If she is a schoolgirl, is the school involved? Shouldn't teachers or staff look at her situation and help find a better way?"
Ms Tankard Reist also questioned what sort of man was attracted to this proposition.
"This raises a lot of questions. Why would someone want to pay to take a girl's virginity?"
Leading Feminist Eva Cox, said it was a "very crappy" situation for all involved.
"Something is wrong in society to encourage this sort of behaviour but this prurient interest about a financial transaction is also a worry.
"I think sex work itself is a perfectly legitimate occupation but I just don't think this is a good way to start one's sex life," she said.
Feminist social commentator, Nina Funnell, said there was a double standard when it came to male and female virginity.
"As a society we still fetishise female virginity by artificially binding it to notions of purity and, in doing so, ascribe a sort of moral character and value to the female hymen. A man who would pay this amount has bought into this and is reaffirming the importance of that perceived purity by assigning a market value to it.
"Moral crusaders intent on banning sex work will also respond to this with unusual levels of zeal," she said.
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Want an escort on demand? There’s an app for that
Published Wed, Nov 11 2015 1:30 AM EST Updated Wed, Nov 11 2015 12:20 PM EST
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There are online marketplaces for anything from private jets to cleaners, so it was only a matter of time before "paid dates," or escorts, came next.
An app called Ohlala launched in Germany earlier this year in a bid to take the Tinder-style concept of meeting people and setting up dates a step further – by letting woman set a price for men to go out with them.
Describing the app in an interview, the founder said it's in between an escort service and a dating app.
"We don't know what is happening on the dates, so I can't confirm that it's an escort service. When the matching is taking place, all of what is happening is agreed upon in the chat," Pia Poppenreiter, chief executive of Ohlala, told CNBC by phone ahead of the Slush technology conference in Helsinki, Finland.
"I think we are in between dating apps and explicit escort sites. It's more private and we are very straightforward and not pitching it on finding the love of your life. We are saying you can have fun for a certain amount of time. People always know what the others are looking for."
Women are able to sign up to the service, upload a profile, add their preferences and a minimum price. Then a man can search for what he is looking for.
The app then matches two people and a price is agreed. The two people can chat and agree on a date. All the money is exchanged in cash with the possibility of card transactions being introduced later.
Poppenreiter is not new to the app game. Last year, she launched an app called Peppr which connected people to prostitutes. She discontinued the controversial app because the model of on-demand prostitutes did not work out. She said that there weren't enough connections so people waiting a couple of hours would give up using the app.
Ohlala only lets men seek for paid dates with women. She said this was a better move because on Peppr "there was not a single booking from women."
"I just learned from Peppr even if women want to go on paid dates, they have a different agenda, and it's not an impulse booking, they want to solve a problem. They write emails for a while, and then meet men offline. Men however are straightforward," Poppenreiter told CNBC.
Ohlala has raised a small amount of early investment funds but the co-founder did not reveal how much because it was confidential. She said she is currently in talks to raise another round which would be "over 1 million dollars."
Currently the service has 13,000 people signed up and Poppenreiter said there are 10 men to one woman, adding that "the dynamic works well."
Ohlala launched in Berlin in August and is available in an additional three German cities. The firm is hoping to expand in the near-term, but that will depend on the city's attitude.
"We are evaluating right now and it will be somewhere with a liberal attitude, we will decide on this in the next two months," Poppenreiter said.
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